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The Spinners became part of Motown when Fuqua sold the company to his brother-in-law, Berry Gordy Jr., but its successes there were only modest, with just two R&B chart Top 10s from a pair of albums.
The Spinners became part of Motown when Fuqua sold the company to his brother-in-law, Berry Gordy Jr., but its successes there were only modest, with just two R&B chart Top 10s from a pair of albums.
The Spinners were on Motown from 1963 to 1972, smack dab in the middle of its heyday, but they were largely neglected by head honcho Berry Gordy.He acquired the group after buying their original ...
It was Spinners Day at the Motown Museum, where key figures from the group — including co-founder Henry Fambrough and onetime lead vocalist G.C. Cameron — were celebrated as returning heroes, ...
The Spinners had been on the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame nominating ballot three times before, but the fourth time proved to be the charm this year. And though no original members remain in the ...
The spinners’ moves attracted a crowd at the competition. A man climbed on a traffic light to try and see over it, but he was chased away by a clown who was having trouble selling balloons ...
Spinners general manager Shawn Smith, a longtime baseball executive and a former G League (then called the NBA Development League) vice president, bluntly asked, “What is their issue with us?” ...
The current Spinners lineup performs at the funeral of the group's cofounder Henry Fambrough at St. Stephen A.M.E. Church in Detroit on Feb. 17, 2024.